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In March, Don Olmstead Jr. (’70 Hort.) watches over his cherry
trees night and day, ready to activate a heating system or switch
on the wind machines to protect the tender buds from a killing
frost. It’s a task he shares with his son and business partner,
Don Olmstead III (’98 Hort.).
In April, the Olmsteads worry about pollination, which only
works if pollen is on the blossoms and the weather is right for
insect activity. Since most cherries can’t self-pollinate, there
must be another variety close by and in bloom. To facilitate
cross-pollination, the Olmsteads hire one beehive per acre,
inviting a few million bees to their ranch for a brief but crucial
period. “There’s even a risk of whether the bees can get out
when the pollen is on,� says Don III. If it’s too cold, they
won’t leave the hive.
Next the pollinated cherries emerge from their husks, growing in
a rapid spurt that determines their ultimate size. At that point,
the skin is very delicate. “Then I’m worried about a wind
storm, which could mark them up,� says Don Jr. “The result is
not a bad fruit, but it’s not a perfect fruit.�
As the leaves come out, the orchardists watch for mildew.
Unchecked, it could spread from the leaves into the fruit.
When the fruit starts to turn color, the Olmsteads guard against
birds, though this is one part of nature they can’t control.
“We have tried everything,� says Don III. Fish oils. Scare
guns. Ribbon tied to branches. They’ve even tried broadcasting
distressed birdcalls from speakers set among the trees. “We’ve
kind of come to a point where we say, 'Well, they’re going to
take a certain percent,'� he says. “We just hope they leave us
enough.�
The Olmsteads brace for other dangers too. “Cherries have
vintage years, just like wine,� says Don Jr. “In the last three
years, two of them have been vintage, with one rather poor one in
between with a rain storm.� When the cherries are near ripe, rain
can cause their skin to rupture, and “the consumer just doesn’t
care for split cherries,� he says.
When the short harvest season arrives in June, the family farm
grows from six full-time workers to nearly 200. The fruit must be
hand picked and the Olmsteads pack much of theirs out in the
orchard. “The Rainier is so delicate, even the slightest rubbing
shows up,� says Don Jr. So they teach the workers which cherries
to pick, to pick them by the stem only, and to gently place the
fruit in a bucket. At the packing station they transfer the
cherries from the bucket to the packing box, again by touching only
the stems.
All this work for such a quick harvest and such a risky crop can
still be rewarding, say the Olmsteads. “Every year is a different
challenge,� says Don Jr. “My wife and I, we have no interest in
Vegas other than the bright lights. We gamble for a living.�
“For us it is a way of life,� says Don III. “The things
you worry about in a year, they are a part of you. Once it’s in
you, it’s hard to get it out.�
The 2006 cherry season is upon us. For a few weeks in the summer
starting in early June, fresh, sweet Washington cherries will color
produce stands and grocery stores around the state. The small,
round stone fruit comes in a range of varieties and colors, from a
delicate yellow to a deep, hearty purple-red. Washington’s sweet
cherry farmers dominate the industry, producing more than half of
the nation’s crop. The state’s soils and cooler, dryer climate
are particularly prime for raising this most risky of tree fruit.
Cherry territory spans the middle of the state, from Okanagan
County in the north down to Benton in the south.
The Olmsteads, whose farm lies in Yakima County, grow three
varieties: the Bing, a firm fruit with a deep red skin; the Van,
another red-skinned variety; and their favorite and the most
fragile, the Rainier.
The yellow- and pink-skinned Rainier came from Washington State
University’s cherry breeding program back in the early 1960s. It
was made by crossing a Bing with a Van, and it produces many
pollen-laden blossoms. Who would have known that the combination of
two dark sweet cherries would result in a “fantastic
yellow-fleshed big cherry,� says Matt Whiting, a horticulturist
at the WSU Research and Extension Center at Prosser. “That tells
you something about cherry breeding. Serendipity is a big part of
this.�
The Rainier was bred as a cross-pollinator by Harold Fogle, a
USDA breeder who worked at the WSU research station in Prosser. No
one knew how good it could be as an eating fruit, until farmer
Grady Auvil of Douglas County took note one year, after a major
frost severely thinned the Rainiers, that what remained was this
massive, beautiful fruit. By the 1970s, the Rainier cherry was a
hot commodity, fetching almost twice what people were paying for
Bings.
In hopes of creating more successes and finding a way to make
cherries easier to harvest and even more appealing to consumers,
WSU has reinstituted a cherry breeding program at Prosser. Whiting
is now heading the effort.
In choosing cherries for your table, it’s all a matter of
taste. For a red cherry, look for colors in the range of dark red
to mahogany. “And you want to see a natural shine,� says
Whiting.
Hunt for the freshest cherries at your local farmers markets,
or, if you have time, find an orchard and fetch them yourself.
Store them in the refrigerator, and they can last for up to two
weeks. And enjoy them while they’re in season. It’s all too
brief.
—Hannelore Sudermann
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